ENGL 216 Quiz 3 Victorianism
ENGL 216 Quiz 3 Liberty University
ENGL 216 Quiz: Victorianism
Covers the Learn material from Module 5: Week 5 — Module 6: Week 6.
- This poem mourns a disappearing rural scene:
 - This work suggests that King Arthur appeared as ordinary to his wife, Guenever, and his poets as Fleet Street is to Victorian poets:
 - In stave 1 of A Christmas Carol, Scrooge’s door knocker transforms into:
 - “We see beautiful adaptations everywhere and in every part of the organic world” comes from this work:
 - In A Christmas Carol, there are five ghosts who visit Scrooge.
 - In Book 2 of Aurora Leigh, Romney supports Aurora’s artistic endeavors.
 - Is the Lady of Shalott looks at Camelot, she will be cursed.
 - The line “I am half sick of shadows” is from the following poem:
 - How does Darwin define natural selection?
 - On the Origin of Species suggests that the structure of every organic being is related.
 - Jane Eyre enjoys reading the Psalms.
 - Jane Eyre describes Mr. Brocklehurst firstly as:
 - In A Christmas Carol, the Ghost of Christmas Present has two children who are:
 - In A Christmas Carol, The Ghost of Christmas Past takes Scrooge back to his childhood.
 - This poet was considered “the poet of the people” and was the most popular Victorian poet:
 - This poem is the keystone poem of the period:
 - On the Origin of Species proposes a struggle for existence among both animal and vegetable kingdoms.
 - Aurora Leigh’s mother died when she was fourteen.
 - Reapers hear the Lady of Shalott:
 - In “The Lady of Shalott” the mirror breaks when the Lady looks down at Camelot to see Lancelot.
 - This work ends with the famous words, “God bless Us, Every One!”
 - In A Christmas Carol, Scrooge’s servants steal from him after he is dead.
 - This character in The Importance of Being Earnest
states she would never consider marrying a man whose name isn’t Earnest: - At the end of A Christmas Carol, Tiny Tim dies.
 - In The Importance of Being Earnest, he makes arrangements to be christened ‘Earnest’:
 - The majority of Victorian readers did not expect literature to delight and instruct.
 - This poem presents the idea that the scientific world has challenged widely accepted theological and moral beliefs, causing people to doubt faith, God, and religion.
 - The Lady of Shalott knows what her curse is.
 - Victorian poetry developed in the shadow of Romanticism.
 - This poet is known for his creation of inscape and sprung rhythm:
 - This poem is a metaphor for Jesus:
 - In The Importance of Being Earnest, Miss Prism:
 - In “The Bishop Orders His Tomb,” the Bishop refers to his ______ as nephews:
 - This work is both an allegory of social responsibility and a fable of individual transformation through symbolic rebirth:
 - In A Christmas Carol, reality and fantasy are juxtaposed.
 - Aurora Leigh’s aunt taught her:
 - This poem tells a story of a woman who wants to create poetry, is ambitious of worldly fame, and shelters a raped woman:
 - A Christmas Carol is broken up into how many staves?
 - The Lady of Shalott lives:
 - The Lady of Shalott is surrounded by:
 - This character in The Importance of Being Earnest created the term ‘bunburyist’:
 - In The Importance of Being Earnest, this character is Cecily’s guardian:
 - The last lines of this poem state, “But the tender grace of a day that is dead / Will never come back to me.”
 - Aurora argues that fathers “have God’s license to be missed.”
 - Key Events of the Victorian period include:
 - What group does Aurora Leigh describe as “the only truth-tellers left to God”?
 - This poem depicts imperfect images that God loves anyway:
 - A Christmas Carol satirizes Victorian society’s harsh treatment of the poor.
 - In A Christmas Carol, Scrooge is not able to change and learn.
 - Jane Eyre’s response to how she should avoid hell is not to die.
 
Set 2
- At the end of The Importance of Being Earnest, this character discovers his real name is ‘Earnest John’:
 - The last lines of this poem state, “But the tender grace of a day that is dead / Will never come back to me.”
 - In Book 2 of Aurora Leigh, Romney supports Aurora’s artistic endeavors.
 - In “The Lady of Shalott” the mirror breaks when the Lady looks down at Camelot to see Lancelot.
 - This poem is a metaphor for Jesus:
 - “We see beautiful adaptations everywhere and in every part of the organic world” comes from this work:
 - This poem mourns a disappearing rural scene:
 - The Lady of Shalott is surrounded by:
 - This poem depicts imperfect images that God loves anyway:
 - This work suggests that King Arthur appeared as ordinary to his wife, Guenever, and his poets as Fleet Street is to Victorian poets:
 - This character in The Importance of Being Earnest created the term ‘bunburyist’:
 - Oscar Wilde can be seen as an early modern, a forerunner of the twentieth century’s renovations of dramatic form.
 - What group does Aurora Leigh describe as “the only truth-tellers left to God”?
 - The Lady of Shalott knows what her curse is.
 - Jane Eyre describes Mr. Brocklehurst firstly as:
 - A Christmas Carol is broken up into how many staves?
 - In The Importance of Being Earnest, Miss Prism:
 - Jane Eyre’s response to how she should avoid hell is not to die.
 - In A Christmas Carol, Scrooge’s servants steal from him after he is dead.
 - In the end of “The Lady of Shalott,” the Lady:
 - In A Christmas Carol, which character says if the poor would rather die than subsist in workhouses, “they had better do it, and decrease the surplus population”?
 - Key Events of the Victorian period include:
 - In stave 1 of A Christmas Carol, Scrooge’s door knocker transforms into:
 - On the Origin of Species proposes a struggle for existence among both animal and vegetable kingdoms.
 - This poet is known for his creation of inscape and sprung rhythm:
 - Victorian poetry developed in the shadow of Romanticism.
 - How does Darwin define natural selection?
 - In The Importance of Being Earnest, this character is Cecily’s guardian:
 - At the end of A Christmas Carol, Tiny Tim dies.
 - “My Last Duchess” can be interpreted in the following way:
 - Aurora argues that fathers “have God’s license to be missed.”
 - This work is both an allegory of social responsibility and a fable of individual transformation through symbolic rebirth:
 - In The Importance of Being Earnest, Jack doesn’t know who his parents are because he was found:
 - The Lady of Shalott lives:
 - This poem presents the idea that the scientific world has challenged widely accepted theological and moral beliefs, causing people to doubt faith, God, and religion.
 - The majority of Victorian readers did not expect literature to delight and instruct.
 - This poet was considered “the poet of the people” and was the most popular Victorian poet:
 - Is the Lady of Shalott looks at Camelot, she will be cursed.
 - The line “I am half sick of shadows” is from the following poem:
 - A Christmas Carol satirizes Victorian society’s harsh treatment of the poor.
 - This poet was raised by an Anglican family, had a conversion experience, and became a Jesuit priest:
 - This work ends with the famous words, “God bless Us, Every One!”
 - This character in The Importance of Being Earnest states she would never consider marrying a man whose name isn’t Earnest:
 - In A Christmas Carol, Scrooge is not able to change and learn.
 - On the Origin of Species suggests that the structure of every organic being is related.
 - Jane Eyre enjoys reading the Psalms.
 - Aurora Leigh’s aunt taught her:
 - In “The Bishop Orders His Tomb,” the Bishop refers to his as nephews:
 - Aurora Leigh’s aunt is compared to:
 - This poem is the keystone poem of the period: